Intel's Collaborative Cancer Cloud, an Open Platform For Genome-Based Treatments 16
Lucas123 writes: Intel and the Knight Cancer Institute have announced what will be an open-source service platform, called the Collaborative Cancer Cloud. The platform will enable healthcare facilities to securely share patient genomic data, radiological imagery and other healthcare-related information for precision treatment analysis. Key to averting HIPAA privacy issues will be Intel's Trusted Execution Technology, its embedded server encryption hardware that tests the authenticity of a platform and its operating system before sharing data. Intel said it will be opening that technology up for use by any clinic that want to take part in the Collaborative Cancer Cloud or to build its own data-sharing network with healthcare partners. Dr. Brian Druker, director of the Knight Cancer Institute, said the Trusted Execution Technology will allow healthcare centers to maintain control of patient data, while also allowing clinics around the world to use it for vastly faster genomic analysis.
fu /. (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
I think (or hope) he meant that /. sometimes auto-refreshes the page, even when you are still writing a comment. I've had this happen to me recently as well.
Prior art! (Score:1)
I believe Beijing's got the patent on collaborative cancer clouds.
open source software, yet proprietary hardware (Score:1, Informative)
Translation (Score:4, Insightful)
>"its embedded server encryption hardware that tests the authenticity of a platform and its operating system before sharing data"
Translation: "Use our proprietary hardware and software and forget about using anything open-source like Linux".
Reminds me a lot of that horrible, crappy "Trusteer" junk that some banks are trying to force on people, especially corporate customers. https://www.trusteer.com/Prote... [trusteer.com]
"Cancer Cloud" (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
So it's the perfect name for it.
I don't understand (Score:3)
How does it stop shoulder surfing, MITM, software bugs, cloning, 100 more things????????//
Data-Sharing (Score:2)
"by any clinic that want to take part in the Collaborative Cancer Cloud or to build its own data-sharing network with healthcare partners."
Oh, yeah, because my local clinic's tech guy is TOTALLY going to do that with good data security practices.
WOW!!! crazy (Score:1)
Look at how many comments are posted here, and how many are positive? .. the Ashley Madison article, which has 100's more..
this is ground-breaking stuff and yet no one realy cares..
Lets compare this to um
What a damn shame..